Sha Tin Wai Explained

Sha Tin Wai is an area in Sha Tin District, New Territories, Hong Kong, named after Sha Tin Wai Village .

Name

The name of the Sha Tin area allegedly comes from the fact that British colonial officials mistook the name of Sha Tin Wai village as the name of the area.

Administration

Sha Tin Wai Village and Sha Tin Wai New Village aka. Sha Tin Wai Resite Area, are recognized villages under the New Territories Small House Policy.[1]

History

The village was established by the Tse, Cheng and Lam clans from Pok Law (Boluo County) in the mid-17th century. Each of the clans has their own ancestral hall.[2] One of the branch of Tse relocated to nearby Yuen Chau Kok to establish their own village.[3]

The village was originally built on the Sha Tin Sea waterfront. As a consequence of successive land reclamation of the former estuary that started in 1905, it is now separated from the Shing Mun River by Sha Kok Estate. The Estate was built in Sha Tin New Town-era. Houses of the traditional villages were then built in front of the initial row of houses, and as a consequence, half of today's Sha Tin Wai is built on reclaimed land.[4]

At the time of the 1911 census, the population of Sha Tin Wai village was 180. The number of males was 81.[5]

Sha Tin Wai village, its surrounding area, as well as area around Sha Tin station in the opposite shore of Sha Tin Sea, were studied by HKU student in 1963 as a possible site of building Hong Kong's satellite town.[6] Those area were indeed selected by the government to become part of Sha Tin New Town project, which included land reclamation of Sha Tin Sea. The modern day Shing Mun River was the residual of the Sha Tin Sea.

See also

Further reading

External links

22.3779°N 114.1976°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: List of Recognized Villages under the New Territories Small House Policy . September 2009 . .
  2. East Rail Extensions - Tai Wai to Ma On Shan. Environmental Impact Assessment Report. Archaeological and Cultural Resources, p 9.8, 1999
  3. Book: Faure, David. The structure of Chinese Rural Society: Lineage and Village in the Eastern New Territories, Hong Kong. East Asian Historical Monographs. Hong Kong. Oxford University Press. 1986. 0-19-583970-6.
  4. Ip . Hing-fong . 1995 . An historical geography of the walled villages of Hong Kong . Postgraduate Thesis, Master of Philosophy . . 77 .
  5. Hase. Patrick . Patrick Hase. Traditional Life in the New Territories: The Evidence of the 1911 and 1921 Censuses. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch. 36. 78. 1996. 1991-7295.
  6. News: 沙田圍有可能闢成衛星城市. 8 July 1963. Wah Kiu Yat Po. 5. Hong Kong. zh-hk.